Stinson Beach California

Stinson Beach SunsetSausalito was laid in 1871, and soon after surveyor Alfred Easkoot was renting tents on the beach to tourists while adopting the pose of an waggish sea salt. Within a decade, "Captain" Easkoot's encampment was challenged by a resort built by Nathan Stinson, whose Willow Camp also included a dance floor.

Photo: Stinson Beach and Bolinas Sunset ©Richard Blair

Stinson would end up owning some 1,700 acres, including what's become the town center. More than century later, perhaps Easkoot would be satisfied that at least the town's creek carries his name.

On the beach itself, the sand dollars and limpet shells wash in for the taking. Surfers and boogie boarders often rule the surfline (despite the occasional white shark encounter).

All the parking is near the southern end of the strand, which is owned by the federal government. North of that, the County of Marin owns a stretch of it (technically called Upton's Beach) and dogs are allowed there. Beyond that, to the mouth of Bolinas Lagoon, the beach is owned by the residents of the Seadrift subdivision.

There's no direct public access to Seadrift Beach, and years of legal battles between various entities and Seadrift homeowners has yielded a compromise only a committee could love. Essentially, the public may use the beach, or at least the part below the mean hightide line (unmarked), and as long as they sort of keep moving. In practice, the arrangement works with few problems, which is surprising since on a clear on day, some 15,000 beachgoers might descend on the 1,000-person town.

The magnificent ridge that rises above Stinson is, like the beach below, federally owned as part of the Golden Gate National Recreation Area. A trail upward - the Matt Davis Trail - can be picked up near the community center. South of town along Highway 1 lies the bottom end of the two-plus-mile-long Steep Ravine Trail, which as the name implies, offers a easier hike downhill than up. Those wanting to tackle the trail from the other direction can start the descent from the Pantoll Ranger Station (altitude around 1,500 feet) on Panoramic Highway, which leaves Highway 1 in Stinson and scales the shoulder of Mount Tamalpais.

The town itself benefits from the healthy boosterism of its residents. A town park - the Village Green - is largely a product of volunteerism. So too is the new library in the unmistakable shell of an old convenience store. And where else could you find a place with no gas station and one ATM machine but several dynamite restaurants and fullblown summer Shakespeare festival?

Galleries

Claudia Chapline Gallery
P.O. Box 1117
3445 Shoreline Hwy,
Stinson Beach, CA 94970
(415) 868-2308 Fax: (415) 868-9436
E-mail: info@chapline.com
www.cchapline.com

 

 

Presented California art since 1974. Her Stinson Beach gallery founded in 1987, shows unique contemporary art of Northern California in changing exhibitions. Open Fri-Sat-Sun, 11-5 and by appointment.
Services

Coastal Health Alliance

PO Box 910
65 Third Street #21 (Admin)
Point Reyes Station, CA 94956
(415) 663-9632

www.coastalhealth.net

Coastal Health Alliance provides quality healthcaare regardless of ability to pay. Accepting most insusrance including Kaiser; most forms of government coverage. To discuss a donation call Deborah Reynolds 663-8781.

For Appointments:

Point Reyes (415) 663-8666
Bolinas (415) 868-0124
Stinson Beach
(415) 868-9656

 

Stinson Beach Community Center
32 Belvedere
Stinson Beach, CA 94970
(415) 868-1444, Fax (415) 868-1904
E-mail: sbcc@stinsonbeachonline.com
The Stinson Beach Community Center is located in Stinson Beach, California, a small coastal village only twenty miles north of San Francisco. The community is nestled between the Pacific shore and the foot of Mt. Tamalpais.
Stinson Beach County Water District
P.O. Box 245
Stinson Beach, CA 94970
(415) 868-1333, Fax (415) 868-9417

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